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Transcript

Name _____________________________________
Period _______
Study Guide Questions for Fahrenheit 451
As you read each section of the novel, answer briefly the following questions. These questions
should act as a reading guide and are not intended to replace careful examination of the novel’s
themes and development.
Part I: The Hearth and the Salamander (pp. 3-68)
1. What do the “firemen” do for a living? Why is this ironic?
2. In the opening scene, why are the books compared to birds?
3. According to pages 3-4, what does Montag think of his job?
4. Who does Montag meet on the way home?
5. During his conversation, Montag says that “You never wash it off completely” referring
to the kerosene. What could this mean symbolically?
6. Why do you think that Bradbury would introduce Clarisse before Montag’s wife,
Mildred?
7. Why does Mildred need help when Montag gets home?
8. Describe the help that she receives.
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9. Is there anything unusual about the way the two men go about helping Mildred? How is
it unusual?
10. How is life in Montag’s house very different from that of Clarisse’s house?
11. How does Mildred react after she wakes up from her previous night’s experience?
12. What does Mildred do all day?
13. Describe the setup of Montag’s TV room.
14. What is Clarisse doing when Montag sees her on page 21?
15. How is Clarisse different than Mildred?
16. What is the mechanical hound and what is its purpose?
17. What is the hound’s reaction to Montag?
18. Why does society consider Clarisse “anti-social?” (p. 29)
19. At the next fire, what does Montag take?
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20. On page 40, Beatty reveals something very important about himself and his knowledge.
What is it?
21. What technology does Mildred use to go to sleep?
22. Who is Mildred’s “family?”
23. What has happened to Clarisse? How did it happen?
24. What is unusual about the way Mildred told Montag about Clarisse?
25. Read pages 55-62 very carefully. They contain great truths about our world. List three
things Beatty talks about in his speech to Montag that are true about our world.
a.
b.
c.
26. What human institutions are being criticized in the novel?
27. What is Fahrenheit 451?
Additional Notes:
3
Vocabulary Focus
The world of the future is filled with hidden menace. Bradbury uses these words to capture the
moral decay.
venomous: poisonous
imperceptible: very slight or gradual; barely noticeable
mausoleum: a stately tomb or a burial place
pulverize: to reduce to dust or powder; demolish completely
melancholy: a depressed or gloomy state of mind
The sentences below are based on descriptions in Part One, pages 3-35. Choose the best
Vocabulary Focus word to complete each sentence. Look for context clues to help you.
NO DICTIONARIES ALLOWED!!!
1. The sound of the jet bombers overhead seems to ____________________________ the
stars and grind them into dust.
2. A(n) ________________________________ feeling grips Montag that another person
may be somewhere nearby.
3. Mildred’s demand to have a fourth wall television installed leaves Montag in a(n)
___________________________________ state of mind.
4. Mildred’s room seems as cold and dark and airless as a(n) ________________________.
5. Montag’s flame thrower shoots its ______________________________flames like a
great snake killing its prey.
Additional Vocabulary:
4
Bradbury uses these words to describe the changes that have transformed society. (pp. 35-68)
odious: hateful; offensive
cataract: a furious rush or downpour of water; a torrent
feign: to put on the appearance of; to pretend
pratfall: a comic or humiliating fall onto the rear end
serenity: peacefulness
gibber: to talk in a confused, meaningless way
1. According to Beatty, no one wants to follow serious pursuits anymore; life has become
one big ______________________________________.
2. The people on the wall television seem to __________________________________
without end, saying nothing of value.
3. In a ___________________________________ of emotion, Montag wonders how a
woman could immolate herself for books.
4. Montag is afraid to ___________________________ illness to avoid Beatty.
5. People seek ________________________, not challenge.
6. The people ban books that are ________________________________ in any way so no
one will feel inferior.
Additional Vocabulary:
5
Study Guide Questions for Fahrenheit 451
Part II: The Sieve and the Sand (pp. 71-110)
1. When was the last liberal arts college shut down?
2. T
F
Professor Faber thought Montag’s call was some sort of trap.
3. Why did Faber’s fear dissipate when Montag was standing outside his door?
4. What did Montag want from Faber?
5. T F
rebels.
Faber reminded Montag that people who are having fun are reluctant to become
6. How did Montag finally get Faber to consider really helping him?
7. T
F
The Queen Bee analogy underscored Faber’s cowardice.
8. What two items were exchanged before Montag left the professor’s house?
9. What is the volcano’s mouth?
10. T
F
Montag pulled the plug on the living room fish bowl.
11. T
F
Faber objected to Montag’s poetry reading.
12. Which lady was affected by the original intent of the poetry?
13. T F In the late hours of the night, Faber refused to console Montag for foolishly
reading poetry to the poor, silly women.
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14. Listening to Captain Beatty play his harp and needle, Montag had what effect upon
Beatty?
15. What interrupted the poker game?
16. Captain Beatty drove the Salamander to whose house?
Additional Notes:
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Vocabulary Focus
Faber helps Montag understand what modern society lacks. Here are some words Bradbury uses
to make his points. (pp. 71-110)
subside: to lessen; to decrease
intuitively: known by intuition or insight
profusion: abundance; great quantity or amount
insidious: intended to entrap or mislead
verbiage: overabundance of words
oracle: someone who can look into the future
1. Montag is _____________________________ right about the value of books, even if he
cannot express his thought in words.
2. Montag devised a(n) ____________________________ plan to hide books in firehouses.
3. Beatty warned Montag not to see himself as a(n) __________________________ with a
message of truth for the world.
4. By oversimplifying everything, people do not see the _________________________ and
complexity of life.
5. Do not mistake mere _________________________________ for meaningful statements
of truth.
6. Montag’s rage would not ____________________________ until he had reduced
Mildred’s guests to tears.
Additional Vocabulary:
8
Study Guide Questions for Fahrenheit 451
Part III: Burning Bright (pp. 111-166)
1. How has Beatty given Montag hints that he is under suspicion?
2. Who must have brought books back from the garden?
3. Who turned in an alarm against Montag?
4. What happened to Montag’s green bullet?
5. Why did Montag burn Beatty’s body?
6. What is Montag’s plan to escape?
7. How much money did Montag give Faber?
8. How many scents can the mechanical hound remember?
9. Why did Montag want Faber to turn on the air conditioning and sprinklers?
10. Interpret “Twenty million Montag’s running, soon, if the cameras caught him.”
11. Why did the search for Montag veer inland?
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12. Who died in Montag’s place?
13. What did Granger mean by “Welcome back from the dead?”
14. When Granger and other like minded people are stopped by authorities, why isn’t any
incriminating evidence found?
15. Do you have a sense that there are other “book chapters” in other towns? What proof do
you have?
16. What does Granger mean by his quote “You’re not important. You’re not anything?”
17. Explain the last implications of the events in the last 4-5 pages.
Additional Notes:
10
Vocabulary Focus
Images of light and dark fill this section of the novel. Bradbury uses these words to describe the
contrasts. (pp. 113-145)
mannikin: a dummy used to display clothes
quarry: something hunted
juggernaut: a large, destructive object that crushes everything in its path
ricochet: to bounce off something from the force of impact
luminosity: brightness
1. Montag becomes the ________________________________; the Mechanical Hound is
the hunter.
2. The stars at night look to Montag like a powerful _______________________________
about to crush him.
3. Beams from police searchlights would ___________________________ off the sides of
nearby buildings.
4. The Mechanical Hound glows with a pale green ______________________________ as
it begins to search for Montag.
5. In death, Beatty looks like a ________________________________, a charred doll that
is no longer human.
Will humanity be able to save itself? Bradbury uses these words to give his response. (pp. 145165).
incriminate: to name others as involved in a crime
fragmentary: consisting of fragments; broken; incomplete
scythe: a tool with a large, curving blade used to cut (hay, wheat) by hand
pedant: a person who makes an excessive display of learning
metropolis: a large, busy city
1. The ___________________________________ in which Montag once lived is totally
destroyed in a nuclear attack.
2. Because Granger’s people memorize books, they carry nothing to ___________________
them.
3. A(n) _______________________________ is someone who feels superior to others
because of the knowledge that he or she carries.
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4. Montag can recall only _______________________________ portions of some books.
5. The aircraft levels the city just as a ____________________________ could level a field
of wheat.
Additional Vocabulary:
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